NEW
BERN, N.C.—With one eye on the ailing economy and the other on the growing
adoption of production automation, Wheatstone arrives at the NAB Show with a
new television audio console that slots in at the lower end of its price range.
Derived from another of Wheatstone’s Bridge TDM-based TV audio desks, the D-8, the
new Series 4 is intended to plug a gap in the market that, in certain cases, may
be filled with consoles better suited to semi-pro recording or sound
reinforcement applications.

“As you get into an automated environment your demands on the audio
board are reduced,” said Phil Owens, eastern U.S. sales for Wheatstone Corp. “So
much so that, in some cases, stations will go to full automation and not even
have an audio board.

“But there are many folks
who don’t want to use that model and would prefer to have a board there. In a
situation like that you want a console system that will communicate with
automation for those unattended dayparts, but that is a real broadcast board
for when you have a live board operator on hand.”

The alternative consoles installed by some facilities often have
limitations, and not only represent a functional compromise but may also be too
complicated to operate in a broadcast environment. “There’s a lot of
multitasking on the surface, menus to wade through, and a lot of knobs that
could be, let’s say, mishandled,” said Owens.

ESSENTIAL
FEATURES
Those
consoles also typically lack features that are essential in broadcast production.
“One is any kind of real machine control, with GPI closures for remote starts
and stops, remote microphone control, and things like that. Studio muting is
usually missing on a board like that. Programmable delay for lip sync correction
is usually missing.”

With
those factors in mind, said Owens, Wheatstone decided to introduce a desk to
address that market segment. “So we took our D-8 console and made some mods to
it to get the price down. They’re not really deep cuts to the system; functionally,
it still does everything a fully-fledged D-8 does. But it’s at a substantially
reduced price point.”

Directly
addressing the intended market, the Series 4 incorporates Wheatstone’s Automation
Control Interface (ACI). When integrated with the plant’s production automation
system, ACI enables automated routing changes or automatic crossfading between
audio inputs as video sources cut or dissolve, to offer two examples. The new console also includes broadcast-specific functionality
such as automatic studio muting, machine control logic, and a tally system.

Similarly
to Wheatstone’s other TV consoles, the Series 4 is networked through the Bridge
TDM system. Resources shared across the network and brought into the Series 4
may be mono, stereo, or 5.1. Like the D-8, the Series 4 incorporates two main
program buses, a 5.1 plus a stereo, plus two auxiliary sends.

“Every
TV surface from Wheatstone does both stereo and 5.1, and will do upmixing from
stereo to 5.1 and downmixing from 5.1 to stereo,” said Owens.

The
Series 4 also addresses a shortcoming of those alternative desk choices: the
configuration of mix-minus buses for IFB feeds. “With those boards you have to
build your mix-minuses using aux sends,” noted Owens.

A
console can have a reasonable number of aux sends, and even matrix sends, but
the controls may be buried below the main menu: “The issue there is how hard is
it to configure and change, especially if you have to change it on the fly.”

In
contrast, the Series 4 offers a direct bus-minus feed from each of its 48 input
fader channels. There are also four assignable mix-minus buses, for a grand
total of 52.

ENHANCED
DIMENSION
Wheatstone
will introduce other new features at this year’s NAB Show. New for the
Dimension Two console is audio file playout. “You can just load up a USB thumb
drive with audio files and play them directly from the system; assign it to a
fader and play it out,” said Owens.

The
company has also introduced layering. “The distinction is that pretty much all
of our previous TV boards used paging that really was like two layers—a page A
and a page B,” said Owens. “But the faders were still married to DSP channels.
We’ve moved away from that to what you could call a European approach, where
you can create up to eight separate layers. The faders can be flexibly assigned
to the DSP channels, so that you have a lot more flexibility when you’re
creating user layouts and snapshots.”

Wheatstone will be in booth C3112 in
the Central Hall of the LVCC.

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